Augmented Reality in Learning
LearnAR is a new learning tool that brings investigative, interactive and independent learning to life using Augmented Reality. It is a pack of ten curriculum resources for teachers and students to explore by combining the real world with virtual content using a web cam. The resource pack consists of interactive learning activities across English, maths, science, RE, physical education and languages that bring a wow-factor to the curriculum
Imagine living in the
magical world of Harry Potter, where the
school hallways are lined with paintings that are alive and interactive. Now
imagine creating an atmosphere like that for your students. Augmented Reality
(AR) allows educators and students to do just that: unlock or create layers of
digital information on top of the physical world that can be viewed through an
Android or iOS device.
Most people who
interact with AR for the first time have a mind-blowing experience but fail to
consider classroom applications. In our elementary school classrooms, we use AR
to create active learning experiences hitherto inconceivable, and in the
process redefine the learning space!
Educators know that
learning deepens, not just through reading and listening, but also through
creating and interacting. With Augmented Reality products like Elements 4D by Daqri, students manipulate
and combine elements -- like mercury -- right from their Android or iOS
devices, rather than just reading about them in a textbook. Anatomy 4D is another free app by Daqri that
allows users to explore a human body and isolate various body systems.
Check out this video for more information:
Classroom Applications
Another app, Aurasma,
allows users to engage in and create Augmented Reality experiences of their
own. Educators and (more importantly) students can use this open source tool to
essentially bring their learning to life. We've seen Aurasma used several
different ways in the classroom.
· Homework Mini-Lessons: When students scan a
page of their homework, the page reveals a video of their teacher helping them
solve a problem.
· Faculty Photo Wall: Set up a display of
faculty photos near the school entrance. Visitors can scan the image of any
instructor and see that figure come to life, telling more about him- or
herself.
· Book Reviews: Students record
themselves giving a brief review of a novel that they just finished, and then
attach that "aura" (assigned digital information) to a book.
Afterward, anyone can scan the cover of the book and instantly access the
review.
· Parent Involvement: Record parents giving
brief words of encouragement to their child, and attach a trigger image to
every child's desk. Anytime students need to hear encouraging words from their
parent, they can scan the image on their desk for virtual inspiration.
· Yearbooks: From tributes to
video profiles, from sports highlights to skits and concert footage, the ways
that AR can enhance a school yearbook are limitless.
· Word Walls: Students can record
themselves providing the definitions to different vocabulary words on a word
wall. Afterward, anyone can use the Aurasma app to make a peer pop up on
screen, telling them the definition and using the word in a sentence.
· Lab Safety: Put triggers (images
that activate media when scanned by an AR-enabled device) all around a science
laboratory so that when students scan them, they can quickly learn the
different safety procedures and protocols for the lab equipment.
· Deaf and Hard of Hearing (DHH) Sign Language
Flashcards: With AR, flashcards
of vocabulary words can contain a video overlay that shows how to sign a word
or phrase.
Not Just Another Fad
There are endless
ideas and possibilities for using AR. Find a longer list of ways to
meaningfully integrate AR here.
Start exploring with
some of the many AR tools available. For example, we've used the free app, ColAR Mix, to have students fill in the app's coloring sheets,
watch the pages come to life, and then compose stories based on the images they
have just designed. Also check out AR Flashcards, AR
Flashcards: Space, NASA Spacecraft 3D and PBS FETCH!
Lunch Rush.
Though it might be a
buzz term in education circles, don't assume that AR is just another fad. After
all, profound learning occurs when students create, share, interact and explain.
AR not only changes the environment around children, it also allows kids to
construct their own exciting learning worlds as small as the atom or as big as
the cosmos.
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